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Trois Couleurs/Three Colours (3 DVD)
 
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Trois Couleurs/Three Colours (3 DVD)

Juliette Binoche , Benoît Régent    DVD
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)

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À propos de Bleu Premier film de la trilogie colorée – suivront Blanc et Rouge en 1994 – Bleu, œuvre particulièrement émouvante, s'interroge sur la signification de la liberté, à travers le portrait d'une femme qui, après avoir brutalement perdu son mari, célèbre compositeur, renonce à tout, avant de reprendre peu à peu goût à la vie.

Cristallin et extrêmement sophistiqué, ce film de l'auteur de La Double Vie de Véronique reste avant tout un film sensoriel : un bruitage inouï – le crash inaugural, le voisinage parisien ; une lumière totalement maîtrisée, irradiée par le bleu du souvenir et de la mémoire, dominent une réalisation particulièrement élaborée qui laisse la part belle aux acteurs et à la musique. Jamais Juliette Binoche n'était parue aussi harmonieuse et sereine ; jamais l'univers sonore du compositeur attitré de Kieslowski, Zbiegniew Preisner, n'avait trouvé pareil équivalent visuel.

Lion d'or à Venise en 1993, le film permet également à Juliette Binoche d'accéder à la reconnaissance internationale, en recevant le prix de la meilleure actrice à Venise la même année et le César de la meilleure interprète féminine en 1994. --Sylvain Lefort


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19 Reviews
5 star:
 (11)
4 star:
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3 star:
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4.4 out of 5 stars (19 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Liberty, equality, fraternity, Oct 9 2008
By 
E. A Solinas "ea_solinas" (MD USA) - See all my reviews
(HALL OF FAME)    (TOP 10 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Trois Couleurs/Three Colours (3 DVD) (DVD)
Around here, red, white and blue are known as the colours of the American flag, and they are also the colours of the French flag.

But they also are the names of the late Krzysztof Kieslowski's brilliant "Three Colours" trilogy. This man hasn't gotten the acclaim of more prominent European directors like Tom Tykwer, but his "Three Colors" trilogy has a delicacy that most directors can only dream of. Beautiful, painful, artfully shot, it's a visual feast for anyone who has an appreciation for beauty, subtlety, and good direction.

In "Blue," Julie de Courcy (Juliette Binoche) and her family are in a car accident when their brakes fail. Julie is injured, but her composer husband and their daughter die. She can't bring herself to commit suicide, but neither can she just go home and get over it. So instead she leaves her palatial house in the country after a night with her husband's old friend Olivier (Benoît Régent), who has been in love with her for years.

Julie arrives in Paris with nothing but a blue cut-glass lampshade, takes back her maiden name, rents an apartment, and tries to leave her old life behind. Though she says she doesn't want love or friends (because they are "traps"), she befriends a promiscuous young woman and is pulled back to Olivier when he starts to finish her husband's unfinished work. In turn, Olivier reveals to her the side of her husband she never knew -- the other woman he loved.

"Blanc" is more of a comedy than a tragedy, but there is an element of sadness as well.Hairdresser Karol Karol (Zbigniew Zamachowski) is being coldly divorced by his beautiful wife Dominique (Julie Delpy) because she is sexually dissatisfied with him. She also strips him of his money and possessions, leaving him playing pitiful music at the subways. What's more, she rubs it in his face that she's now having sex with other men.

Things can't get worse, right? Wrong: Karol goes back to Poland and ends up getting beaten up and robbed. Via some not-so-legal methods, Karol builds himself an impressive fortune and becomes determined to get back at his cold, manipulative ex-wife. Amid a web of killing, seduction and faked death, Karol finds the perfect method to bring Dominique down...

And "Rouge" is the color of love. On her way home from a modelling session, Valentine (Irene Jacob) accidently runs over and injures a pregnant dog. The owner is Joseph Kern, (Jean-Louis Trintignant) an embittered, cynical ex-judge whose years of condemnation and acquittal have left him spiritually adrift. He now spends his time alone in his house, wiretapping the phones of his neighbors and predicting what will happen in their lives.

After Valentine expresses disgust at Joseph's activities, he turns himself in to the authorities. Their friendship grows into a bond of differing values and unhappy histories. As Valentine prepares to leave for England, the judge reveals the tragic circumstances of his early life -- a tragedy mirrored by some of the people he has been spying on.

The three colours of the French flag symbolize liberty, equality and fraternity -- and these are echoed in the stories of Kieslowski's films. And each of the three movies has its own "feel" -- "Blue" is cool and sensual, "White" was sharp and sexy, and "Red" has a sweetness and richness that is truly moving.

And while most directors are just boring when they do slow, arty direction, Kieslowski infused his direction with sensual beauty and endless light and colour, like a painting come to life. And he intertwined many symbolic images and lingering threads from one movie to the next, whether it's an old lady recycling bottles or a rather surprising finale for "Red" that brings all three movies' protagonists together.

And he saturated the movies with the colour of their title -- blue is sadness, depth and beauty; white is beautiful and pure, stark and blinding; red is passion and warmth. While this may not have been Kieslowski's intention, the constant presence of these colors (a bridal gown, a swimming pool, and so on) add an extra dimension to the emotions in the story, especially the first.

Juliette Binoche is an extremely good actress, and this movie uses her expressiveness as most movies don't. Zamachowski brings an element of humanity and poignancy to what could have been an idiotic character, and I never felt anything but understanding for this guy. And Irene Jacob brings a sweetness and innocence to her role as Valentine (aptly named, considering the title of the movie she stars in) that is rarely seen in modern movies.

Kieslowski was an unusual and extremely talented moviemaker, and his "Three Colors" trilogy -- "Bleu," "Blanc" and "Rouge" -- is an exceptional piece of work. We shall not see his like again.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars An astoundingly moving piece of Art., Dec 26 2004
This review is from: Trois Couleurs/Three Colours (3 DVD) (DVD)
Yes- Art with a capital A- the trilogy explores the shockingly powerful and fragile relationships between people- between friends, lovers, couples, and families.

Although Bleue is the best known (mainly because of the stellar performance by Juliet Binoche) the films that followed are profoundly movingly, especially Rouge.

In Rouge an aspiring model is drawn into the life of a retired judge when she accidentally hits his dog while driving. Her presence in his life brings him closer to understanding his life, and gives her the perspective to change hers.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Mouse's revenge, May 15 2003
By 
Joseph Haschka (Glendale, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
Mouse's revenge

WHITE is one in a trilogy of French films also comprising BLUE and RED.

As the film opens, Polish emigre Karol Karol (Zbigniew Zamachowski) arrives in a Parisian court for his divorce hearing. His wife, the ravishing Dominique (Julie Delpy), is giving him the toss because he no longer satisfies her sexually, although she admits he was hot stuff when they first met in Warsaw.

After the dissolution of the marriage is decreed, Dominique dumps Karol's possessions, all contained in a large trunk, into the car park and drives off. Karol soon discovers that she's also cut off his access to their joint bank account. Karol, now down and out and soliciting handouts in the Paris Metro, absorbs the abuse without any overt sign of anger, even after his ex figuratively pushes his nose into the fact that she's copulating with another man. Karol is the meekest and most inoffensive of men. Let's not mince words; he's a wimp.

With the help of another Pole, Mikolaj (Janusz Gajos), Karol returns to Warsaw by an unusual route. Once arrived, he literally ends up in a ditch. Rock bottom is a hard place.

Karol is an award-winning hairdresser, and he begins working in his brother's beauty shop. Through good luck and a series of shrewd moves unrelated to the hair trade, he becomes rich. And it's also clear that he remains obsessed with Dominique.

WHITE is somewhat less subtle than BLUE, and therefore demands less cerebral exercise on the part of the viewer; BLUE tries too hard to be obscure. Karol is an enormously endearing character, much like a puppy that's been kicked. And, though we don't know what his grand strategy is, we recognize that he has a plan that he's clearly implementing. The lovely Juliette Binoche in BLUE is a more aloof figure as she struggles to recover from a family tragedy, and it's only from close-ups of her face that the audience can infer what's going on inside. WHITE is thus, to this viewer, the more satisfying of the two.

Zamachowski's performance is solid, and Mikolaj is the friend that anybody could hope for. And Delpy's Dominique is eye candy that would drive any sober man on a fevered quest.

It's said that revenge is a dish that's best eaten cold, and WHITE suggests such a meal. The very last scene strongly implies, however, that Karol ultimately lacks the requisite dispassion.

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